Vol. LXXXIII No. 7 Omaha, NE
Celebrating 82 Years of Service to Nebraska and Western Iowa
A Taste of Israel and a Talk about Religious Equality by CLAUDIA SHERMAN Temple Israel Communications Coordinator Looking for something different for Friday night dinner? How about something Mediterranean, something Israeli? A Shabbat dinner, featuring authentic Israeli flavors and regional dishes prepared by Moshe Basson, owner/chef of the Eucalyptus, the Jerusalem Land of Israel Restaurant, Chef Moshe Basson will be served at Temple Israel on Friday, Oct. 31, 6 p.m. No other restaurant in Israel has received the level of acclaim and number of positive reviews that the Eucalyptus enjoys, according to a newspaper review. A place of pilgrimage for food writers visiting Israel and other enthusiasts of the gastronomic experience, Eucalyptus was located in a ramshackle building in the Talpiot industrial zone of Jerusalem, hidden under a spreading tree from which the establishment took its name. Its fame spread slowly by word of mouth until last year when the restaurant closed which led to mourning in the culinary community. Eucalyptus reopened but due to the turmoil in Israel, it was closed again. Basson’s three-week visit to the United States is sponsored by the Israeli Affairs Committee of Congregation Ohev Sholom of Prairie Village, KS. With all proceeds going to the chef, Ohev Sholom hopes to help the economy of Israel in a small but direct way. Basson’s imaginative menu, based on biblical flavors, features Jerusalem Mediterranean cooking which is gaining popularity because of its healthy ingredients
and fresh flavors. The chef travels throughout Israel to harvest wild herbs and had even started growing his own produce on the restaurant’s roof. Following the dinner, Rabbi Uri Regev, Executive Director of the Israel Religious Action Center, the advocacy arm of the Reform Movement in Israel, will speak at Shabbat worship services which begin at 7:30 p.m. Rabbi Uri Regev Established in 1926 in London and now headquartered in Jerusalem, the World Union for Progressive Judaism is the largest body of religious Jews in the world. The organization serves congregations and communities in nearly 40 countries encompassing more than 1,200 Reform, Progressive, Liberal, and Reconstructionist congregations and more than one and a half million members throughout the world. Prior to his current position, Rabbi Regev served as founding chair and later as Executive Director and counsel of the Israel Religious Action Center (IRAC), the leading advocacy group in Israel promoting religious pluralism, social justice, and human equality established by the Reform Movement. In that capacity, he led the battles in which he and IRAC’s legal team achieved historic victories in the Supreme Court of Israel in cases involving the “Who is a Jew?” issue, the fight for representation in religious councils for equitable funding for Reform and Conservative institutions, and on other central issues of religious freedom and religious pluralism in Israel. Continued on page 2
21 Tishrei, 5764 October 17, 2003
Former Ambassador to Israel To Speak in Omaha Next Week
Dennis Ross, the former U.S. Ambassador to the State of Israel, is the featured speaker for the 2004 Jewish Federation’s Community Campaign Event, scheduled for Thursday, Oct. 23, 8 p.m., at Beth El Synagogue. The event is free to the Omaha Jewish community with an increased pledge of any amount to the 2004 Annual Campaign. Ross is the Director and Ziegler Fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, was President Clinton’s envoy to the Middle East. His book, The Missing Peace, will be published next year. A Major Gifts dinner with the Ambassador will precede the Community Event, starting at 5:45 p.m. Chairmen for the event are Steven and Carol Bloch and Jennifer and Scott Meyerson. For more information and to read recent commentary by Ambassador Ross, visit the Federation website at: www.jewishomaha.org.
Noted Legal Scholar and Author Jeffrey Rosen Brings Clarity to Constitutional Issues by WENDY GOLDBERG NCJW BenchMark Co-chairman Jeffrey Rosen, professor of law at The George Washington University Law School in Washington, D.C., will present a lecture entitled, “Defending Privacy,” regarding the potential for erosion of constitutionally-protected privacy rights as the federal courts and United States Supreme Court become more conservative, on Wednesday, Nov. 12, 7 p.m. The National Council of Jewish Women, Omaha Section (NCJW) is sponsoring this event as part of NCJW’s ongoing BenchMark Campaign. Prof. Rosen will speak at the William H. Thompson Alumni Center on the campus of the University of Nebraska at Omaha. This event is open to the public, free of charge. BenchMark is a campaign to educate, mobilize and advocate for a federal judiciary that will protect fundamental freedoms, including an individual’s right to privacy, religious and other minority rights, and a woman’s right to reproductive choice. It is a combination of grassroots and national efforts that reach out to the decision makers on judicial
Inside
appointments-our U.S. Senators-who vote to confirm federal judicial nominations. Over the next several years, more than 30 percent of federal appeals court seats and, very likely, some United States Supreme Court seats, will become available to life-time appointees. NCJW is committed to ensuring that the judges who fill these positions hold firm to the constitutional principles so essential to our democratic way of life. “The pro-choice position is the belief that every woman has the right to make private and personal decisions concerning such important matters as contraception, when and whether to have a child, and abortion,” said Carol Bloch, a former NCJW National Board Member. “When the basic question is ‘Who decides?’ the basic answer must be ‘the woman.’” she added. “Women rightly have the constitutional and humane right to live in a society in which they can make their own personal decisions without being harassed by people who do not agree with them, attacked by antichoice terrorists, or forced by politicians to give birth.
Jeffrey Rosen “A person can be unsure of their feelings, or even be against abortion for themselves, and still be ‘pro-choice,’” Bloch insisted. “Without fundamental rights of privacy and free choice, and tolerance for the choices of others, we cannot have a moral and democratic society.” Prof. Rosen teaches constitutional law, criminal procedure and the law of priva-
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cy at The George Washington University Law School, as well as serving as the legal affairs editor of The New Republic. A graduate of Harvard College, summa cum laude, Prof. Rosen was a Marshall Scholar at Balliol College in Oxford, England, and received his J.D. from Yale University School of Law. His book, The Unwanted Gaze: The Destruction of of Privacy in America (2001), has been hailed by The New York Times as “the definitive text to privacy perils in the digital age.” Rosen is a frequent contributor to The New York Times Magazine, The New Yorker and National Public Radio. Professor Rosen’s second book, The Naked Crowd: Reclaiming Security and Freedom in an Anxious Age, is scheduled for release in January 2004. This program is made possible through the contributions of NCJW-Omaha Section, the Susan A. Buffett Foundation, Darlynn and Tom Fellman and the Sharee and Murray Newman Foundation. For further information about this event or about BenchMark, please contact Susan Norton, NCJW BenchMark Cochairman, at 334-6565.
Coming Nov. 7: Salute to Education and Camping Mmmm Good! Campbell’s Vegetable Soup Goes Kosher...page 11
Goldsteins Form New Foundation page 16